Frieda’s eyes hovered half open. Waves of energy sparkled over her skin and through her body as if every tissue sizzled with independent life. For a moment, she could believe she dissolved in water, and her cells floated away in a diffuse cloud to the limits of the ocean.
The wind turned cold, and Frieda shivered. Deek stirred on top of her, but neither moved. Frieda blinked up at the sky. The sun slipped behind the canopy, and the shadows deepened. Deek sighed and shifted on top of her. Then he cleared his throat.
“Do you have to go?” she asked.
“I don’t have anywhere to go but home,” he replied.
Frieda let out a shaky breath. Home—where was that? Was it her little house, or was it the family house in the village? What difference did it make? One was as home as the other. She no longer cared where she went.
Deek murmured into her ear. “Come with me.”
She blinked, and her vision cleared. “Where?”
He pulled back and studied her. “I’m going to the village. I’m going to my family. Come back to the village and stay there with me.”
Her cells congealed once again into a body she could inhabit. “I’ll come. I'll come anywhere with you.”
He stared at her, but didn’t respond. Then he buried his face in her neck again with a long sigh. The heat of their union dissipated and left them cold. They clung to each other for warmth, but the cold came from inside them, from being separated. “We should go soon.”
She ran her fingers into his hair, “Let’s go.” But they made no move to get up.
He held himself still against her chest and waited. When he finally spoke, his voice quivered. “Are you sure?”
She pushed him back and gazed deep into his eyes. “I’m sure. Let’s go. I want to.”
He rose on his elbows to give her room to get up. She wriggled back into her pants. How coarse and unwieldy they were. The Aqinas’ white gown was much more practical and comfortable. She would have to find one for herself.
Deek got to his feet, too, and they set off through the forest. Frieda slipped her hand into his and smiled at him when he raised his eyebrows. Everything was right. Nothing could spoil her certain solidity of mind. She’d found her place at last.
When they emerged from the forest, the sun broke through the treetops once again and warmed Frieda through. She raised her face to the sky and drank in the beauty of the meadow with its smell of flowers. She cast her eye back toward her little house, but it no longer called to her. Her home was elsewhere, with Deek.
“Do you want to stop by and pick anything up?” he asked. “What about your sewing? You could bring it with you.”
She shook her head. “I’ll come back for it later.”
They walked on without a word in undisturbed tranquillity. Frieda caught sight of the village ahead, and her heart laughed in pure joy. No one could ask for a better home or kinder people. What more could life offer but family, and work and comfort?
They rounded the corner of the forest, and Jen came out of her house. Frieda smiled up the hill at her. Then Sasha and Fritz came out of another house. Deek stopped. Frieda looked at him. “What’s the matter?”
He stared up at the village. More people came out of their houses. They joined hands and filed down the hill. More and more people took their places at the end of the line until hundreds of people, from every doorway, descended the hill and passed Deek and Frieda. Frieda stared at them. The front of the line turned the corner and disappeared into the meadow. More and more people, people she didn’t recognize, flooded the village byways and joined the procession.
Frieda could barely choke out a whisper. “What’s going on?”
“It’s the convocation,” Deek murmured.
“You just had one last night,” Frieda pointed out. “Why are they having another one?”
Deek shook his head, but at that moment, Trin burst out of the house and hurried toward them. “Come quick, both of you!”
“What’s happening?” Frieda asked.
“It’s the factions,” Trin told her. “The Felsite and the Ursidreans are meeting on the frontier. They’re making peace.”
Chapter 9
Deek took a step forward to follow Trin to the convocation, but Frieda held back. He glanced back at her. “Are you coming?”
She tried to pull her hand out of his grasp. “I don’t think so.”
He brought his face closer to hers. “Come now, Frieda. If you’re going to join the Aqinas and stay here with me, you should come now. We need you.”
Frieda’s eyes flew open. “You need me? What for?”
“For the convocation,” he replied. “We need every Aqinas to participate so we can get a clear vision of what’s happening on land. Help us. It’s the best way we can help the other factions put their differences aside.”
Frieda watched the long line of white-clothed people. The end of the line approached the corner. They would enter the meadow in a minute and leave her behind, alone. Was she with them or not?
Deek loosened his grip on her hand to let her go. He would leave her to join his people. She couldn’t let that happen. If the convocation was good enough for him and his family, it was good enough for her. She caught hold of his hand again and squeezed it. “I’m coming with you.”
They ran to catch up with the last Aqinas in line. Deek caught the man by the hand, and Frieda held onto Deek. She couldn’t go wrong if she only kept hold of him.
The line emerged into the meadow and circled back on itself. Frieda couldn’t see any faces in the enormous circle beyond those closest to her. White specks dotted the landscape and formed a huge ring. The front of the line looped back and Jen, the first person in the line, took Frieda’s hand. A surge of power ran through the circle, and the grass and flowers inside the ring shimmered with watery waves.
Frieda’s head swam, and before her eyes, the whole landscape disappeared. In the middle of the circle, an arid plain stretched from one horizon to the other. A bleak, yellow sun glared down from an empty sky. None of the colors of the Aqinas world decorated that country.
A chasm cut the plain in half, and on one side, a column of people crossed the expanse. Some rode on palanquins off the ground, but most walked in files of three and four. A leonine man with a burnt orange mane of hair around his head stood on the palanquin at the column’s head, and a small, dark-haired woman sat at his feet. She had no mane. She was human.
A murmur rippled through the convocation. Was it a voice, or just a silent knowing transmitted through the water connecting them all? “Alpha Renier, leader of the Felsite. And that’s Carmen, his mate.”
Across the plain, on the other side of the chasm, another column rose out of the parched ground. They rode on some kind of vehicles, most with massive guns mounted on their fronts. The people all carried weapons, and the weapons buzzed with strange energy.
A burly man with black hair and powerful shoulders sat on one of the vehicles, but he didn’t show himself the way the Felsite leader did. He sat among his men, with only a burning intensity in his small black eyes and on his heavy brow to indicate the weight on his shoulders.
“Alpha Donen, leader of the Ursidrean faction,” the water whispered. Frieda didn’t see any females in the Ursidrean column, and none accompanied Donen on his battle machine.
The vision pulled back to take in the whole scene, and a tiny hint of movement caught Frieda’s eye from somewhere deep inside the chasm. She narrowed her eyes, and the vision focused on the spot. All of a sudden, she cried out in surprise.
Four tiny specks, lonely and insignificant, appeared in the very bottom of the canyon. Two women and two men raced along the stream that cut through sheer clay walls. They ran on an intercept course with the two columns. The first man was Lycaon, with slender, supple limbs and pointed ears sticking up through his rusty brown hair. Frieda recognized Turk, younger twin brother to Caleb, the Lycaon Alpha. He’d visited the Lycaon village a couple of times while she was there. He vi
sited his brother and mother and sister. Then he disappeared into the forest. A rumor went around the village that he lived with a human mate up on the mountain, but no one had seen her.
In the vision, a tall human woman ran at his side. She wore clothes made of skins like all Lycaon, and she carried a short blade in one hand. Her long hair hung down her back braided into a thick rope, and it swung back and forth as she ran. She must be Turk’s secret mate.
Another surprised cry broke the silence of the vision, and Frieda glanced to her right. Sasha moved forward, but the Aqinas kept hold of her hands to keep the circle complete. “That’s Chris Sebastiani,” Sasha cried out. “She was with me when the Romarie ship crashed. She had to leave me for dead when the Lycaon rescued her and the other women.”
The other man in the little group was Ursidrean. Frieda didn’t recognize him, and the water gave no hint who he might be. But she tried to tear herself out of the circle when she saw the other woman. Her brown hair hung loose past her shoulders, and she wore close-fitting pants and a fitted shirt. She didn’t run as fast as the Lycaon. She kept close to the Ursidrean. “Emily!”
Deek murmured into her ear. “Don’t step out of line. You’ll break the connection.”
She yanked harder at her hand. “That’s my sister Emily. We thought she died when the Romarie ship crashed.”
A watery knowing swept over her. No images interfered with the collective vision of the convocation, but some buried part of Frieda understood what happened to Emily. She fell out of the ship when it broke up in the atmosphere. She must have found her way to the Ursidreans somehow. That must be why she stayed close to that big Ursidrean male now. Anybody could see they cared about each other.
“Don’t break the connection,” Deek told her.
Frieda took a step forward against his restraining hand. “I have to go to her. I have to at least tell her I’m okay. She probably thinks I’m dead. This could be my only chance to find her and communicate with her.”
He pulled her back with such force that she spun around to face him. “Don’t step out of line, Frieda. This is much too important. The factions are making peace, after centuries of war. We can’t allow anything to interfere with that.”
“I have to go,” she insisted. “I can’t be happy here until I see my sister.”
“I thought you’d settled that,” Deek remarked. “You said you would stay and join our family.”
Frieda glanced toward the vision. “That was before I saw Emily. She’s right there in front of me. I can’t turn my back on her.”
“If you go out there,” Deek warned, “you won’t come back.”
The vision shifted again, and Donen and Renier embraced in fraternal greeting. They talked together, and then welcomed Turk into their circle to represent the Lycaon.
Sasha spoke up. “I have to see Chris. I have to tell her I’m alive. I can’t let her go on thinking I died in the crash.”
Her words gave Frieda courage. “I’m going, too.”
Fritz answered them. “We will all go. We will join the factions in their bid for peace.”
Frieda whirled around. “You can’t all go.”
Fritz smiled at her. He still held Sasha’s hand. “We can. We will see what these factions mean to do. We shouldn’t sit aside and let them negotiate without making our presence known.”
Frieda burst into a radiant smile. Fritz let go of his brother’s hand, but he held onto Sasha. The vision evaporated before their eyes, leaving the unchanged meadow in its place. Fritz set off across the meadow toward the center of the circle, and the other Aqinas fell in line behind him with their hands still joined.
By the time Fritz reached the center of the meadow, the circle turned around behind him and left the way clear for him to keep going. His rhythmic steps tread the waving grass, and he danced across the meadow toward the wall on the other side. A deafening roar rose, as it seemed to Frieda, out of the very sky. It rattled her bones like thunder, but instead of loud claps, it rolled on and on in a continuous devastating tide. The howl of wind or the crash of surf on the beach couldn’t hold a candle to this. The noise crushed Frieda’s spirit. She would have cowered on the ground and covered her head with her arms to protect herself from it, but the Aqinas drew her ever onwards, closer and closer to the wall and the noise.
A black hole opened at the base of the wall. Not a glimmer of light shone from its depths. It wasn’t a tunnel or a door, but a yawning maw in the fabric of space, and every Aqinas passed through it and ceased to exist. No shadow remained of the bright-clad people. One after another, they fell into that hole until Frieda remained with only Deek on one side and Jen on the other.
They gave her no chance to hesitate. She’d made her decision, and she ceased to exist along with them. The noise pulverized her into nothing, and her consciousness blinked out. Then, as suddenly as it began, the noise stopped, and a mind-numbing silence took its place. The silence destroyed her being more cruelly than the noise. She would have given anything to get that noise back to fill the void.
An icy cold pierced her soul, and her eyes snapped opened. The broad sky spread over her head, and the same plain she saw in the Aqinas’ collective vision lay exposed under it. The two columns stood face to face across the chasm with a winding river tracing its bottom.
Nothing penetrated Frieda’s mind but the cutting cold. The warm contentment of the Aqinas world, the beauty of the meadow and the multi-faceted sky, the delicious smell of grass and flowers thriving under the sun—all were gone, gone forever, never to be restored. In their place, the cold struck to her very core, and an endless gulf separated her from every other being in the universe.
She held to Deek’s hand for her very life. He anchored her to the world she left behind. He wouldn’t let her fall into the vacuum. He would find a way to take her back there. A trickle of water slithered across her toes. She looked down. She was standing, along with the other Aqinas, in the river at the bottom of the canyon.
And all around her, the frigid air, the empty, hollow air stabbed through her skin to the very center of her being. Nothing connected her to anyone or anything anymore in this empty world. The water was gone, leaving nothing—nothing!—in its place.
Across the riverbed, her sister Emily stood with the others. She started back in surprise when the Aqinas appeared, but Frieda registered her emotions only from a great distance. Emily’s eyes swept the line of Aqinas. They skipped over Frieda’s face. Emily didn’t recognize her own sister. The same mistrust burned in Emily’s eyes as burned in the others’. She hated and feared the Aqinas. She believed the stories she’d heard.
All Frieda’s desire to reach out to her sister, all her notions of educating the Angondran people about the Aqinas and their world, all vanished along with the water. She felt no connection with anyone anymore. She cared about one thing only, and that was keeping contact with the water at her feet. If she stepped out of that riverbed, she was lost forever. She would never find her way back to the Aqinas world, to the home, the family, the beauty, the belonging. She wouldn’t sacrifice that for anybody, least of all Emily.
Fritz greeted the Felsite leader, but even he made sure to keep his feet in the water. “We meet again, Alpha Renier.”
Frieda had to summon all her concentration to comprehend what they were saying. When her eyes wandered back to the faces of Emily and the other women, the men’s voices broke up into gibberish. They were talking about peace, whatever that meant. These people couldn’t understand peace. Peace existed in the water—nowhere else. Without the water to connect them, they could never fathom a concept as delicate as peace.
Then Fritz turned to the women. “I come to seek you and your kind. I come to communicate with you.” His attention disturbed them, and they shifted back and forth on their feet. They withdrew from him in silent revulsion. They would withdraw from her, too, if they ever realized she was there.
The woman Sasha recognized, the woman she called Chris, frowned at
him. “What could you have to say to us?” She wanted nothing to do with him. None of them did.
He waved his hand toward the Aqinas in the line, and Sasha stepped up onto the dry land. The moment her foot left the water, a blank expression covered her face and the light went out of her eyes. She stared straight in front of her, and her voice lost its ring.
Emily swept Sasha up and down with her eyes. The lifeless mask of her face horrified Emily more than the others, but Sasha approached the group and stopped in front of Chris. “I came to speak to you.”
Chris stared at her for a moment. Then her mouth dropped open. “Sasha!”
Chris rushed forward, but something in Sasha’s wooden demeanor made her stop short of throwing her arms around Sasha. She took hold of both her shoulders instead.
“Do you know this woman, Chris?” Emily asked
Chris gazed into Sasha’s face. “I only met her once, but I thought she was dead. What happened to you, Sasha?”
“I thought I was dead,” Sasha murmured. “I don’t remember exactly what happened.....”
From her place in the line, Frieda recognized it all. Without the water to anchor her, Sasha’s mind drifted with the fickle air. She couldn’t remember what happened to her. She glanced over her shoulder at the Aqinas to try to get her bearings. Nothing could restore her but the water. She longed for the water as much as the rest of them.
“The Romarie strangled you,” Chris told her. “It happened right in front of me. Do you remember the crash?”
Sasha blinked. “The crash....”
“What’s the last thing you do remember?” Chris asked.
Sasha hesitated. “It was raining.”
Fritz spoke up. “She washed into the river in the rain. That’s where we found her.”
Emily stepped forward. “Are you coming back with us? Is that why you’ve come?”
Rhani (Dragons of Kratak Book 3) Page 58